RALPH H. GROVES, Respondent, v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES et al., Appellants.
L. A. No. 22110
In Bank
Apr. 28, 1953
40 Cal. 2d 751
G. Revelle Harrison and Thomas B. Sawyer for Respondent.
Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General, and Harold B. Haas, Deputy Attorney General as Amici Curiae on behalf of Respondent.
CARTER, J.----Defendants, the City of Los Angeles, and its chief of police and city clerk (who is its tax collector) appeal from a judgment declaring invalid its Ordinance No. 77,000 as amended by Ordinance No. 92,414, and enjoining the collection of the license tax thereunder. The court found that plaintiff is engaged in the business of soliciting, effecting and negotiating undertakings of bail in and out of Los Angeles as agent of National Automobile and Casualty Insurance Company, a corporation, (hereafter called National) authorized to engage and engaged in the insurance business (including bail bonds) in California; he holds a bail agent‘s license issued under the law of this state. (
Ordinance No. 77,000 as amended by Ordinance No. 92,414 provides that every person in the business of “‘... soliciting, negotiating, effecting, issuing, delivering, or furnishing bail bonds or of the posting of undertakings of bail for the release of persons charged with public offenses shall pay for each calendar year, or fractional part thereof, a license tax in the sum of $50.00 for the first $5,000 or less of gross receipts, and in addition thereto, the sum of $5.00 per year for each additional $1,000 of gross receipts, or fractional part thereof, in excess of $5,000. The term “gross receipts” as used herein shall not include any insurance premiums received on behalf of any insurance company qualified to do business in the State of California, nor any commissions paid out of such premiums.‘” Also thereunder it is unlawful for any person to engage in the specified business without a license and any person violating the ordinance is subject to punishment. The license tax is, however, for purposes of revenue, not regulation. (See Fox Etc. Corp. v. City of Bakersfield, 36 Cal. 2d 136 [222 P.2d 879].)
It was also found that plaintiff is not engaged in the business of posting bail bonds from which he receives gross receipts as defined in the ordinance other than in the transaction
By its judgment the court declared the ordinance invalid insofar as it purports to impose a tax on plaintiff and that he is not liable for a tax thereunder; defendants are enjoined from collecting any taxes levied on plaintiff by virtue of the ordinance.
According to the evidence plaintiff‘s business arrangement, generally, was as follows: Groves (not the plaintiff) and Rubin, a partnership doing business as Associated Bond & Insurance Agency (referred to as Associated) is in the surety bail bond business as general agent for National and the partners hold bail agents’ licenses. Associated holds general power of attorney from National and power to appoint agents for it over whom it exercises close supervision. It appointed plaintiff as one of such agents for National. Upon receiving an application for a bail bond upon a form furnished by and addressed to National, plaintiff would send it to Associated. It is executed by Associated under its power of attorney from National and delivered to plaintiff----National‘s agent. The agent reported to Associated every week on business transacted, and the latter reported weekly to National. Agents, such as plaintiff, could charge for a bail bond, any percentage of the face amount not exceeding 10 per cent. They paid 2 per cent of the face amount of the bond (part of which was for a reserve fund to meet losses on bonds) less a certain per cent to Associated and the latter paid 1 per cent of the amount of the bond, less its commission to National. National is the surety or “insurer” on the bond and the one to whom the state looks in case of forfeiture. As between the agent and Associated the former had to make good a loss from forfeiture, and Associated was in the same position as National in that respect.
This case has been on appeal before (Groves v. City of Los Angeles, 93 Cal. App. 2d 17 [208 P.2d 254]). There plaintiff
Defendants contend that plaintiff is an independent contractor rather than an agent for National and that hence neither he nor National through him is engaged in the insurance business in the state and thus the in lieu tax provisions of the Constitution, supra, do not apply, that the ordinance does not purport to tax an insurance business (exempted under last section, supra) and that therefore the judgment enjoining the collection of the tax is erroneous.
The law on the subject was settled in Hughes v. Los Angeles, 168 Cal. 764 [145 P. 94]. When the Hughes case was decided the Constitution (
“‘You take my house when you do take the prop
That doth sustain my house; you take my life
When you do take the means whereby I live.‘”
(Hughes v. Los Angeles, supra, 168 Cal. 764.)
In 1937, the Legislature adopted a statute providing that “An insurer shall not execute an undertaking of bail except by and through a person holding a bail license issued as provided in this chapter.” (
It was held in Edward Brown & Sons v. McColgan, 53 Cal. App. 2d 504 [128 P.2d 186], that the in lieu tax provision of the Constitution (
Defendants argue, however, that here the plaintiff was an independent contractor rather than an agent of National and he was engaged in an independent business which was not the insurance business or National‘s business. Hence his business is taxable by the city, and by reason of the last sentence of the ordinance it does not purport to tax other than that business, and the Hughes case is distinguishable. In effect, they are asserting that the evidence does not support the trial court‘s findings that plaintiff was engaged in no business other than that of insurance and that he was National‘s agent.
At the outset, we have the statutory provision that an insurer cannot conduct a bail bond business except by and through a licensed bail agent (
In support of their claim of independent business, and that plaintiff is not an agent, defendants point to the requirement of the Insurance Code that bail bond agents must meet special qualifications and obtain a license to act as such; that the contracts between National and Associated refer to the “sale” of the bonds by the former to the latter for “resale” to bail agents and similarly those between Associated and the agents refer to “sale” by Associated to the agent for “resale” by him to the public; that plaintiff-agent must indemnify Associated rather than National for losses on bonds, and Associated indemnifies National; and that plaintiff maintains his own offices, pays his expenses, controls his affairs and fixes the amount he charges as fees for arranging for bonds. While those things may be factors to consider (see Garrison v. State of California, 64 Cal. App. 2d 820 [149 P.2d 711]), they are not so compelling as to refute wholly the basic circumstances that National may only conduct a bail bond business through agents and hence it must be doing so here; Associated is empowered by National to appoint and does appoint agents such as plaintiff through whom National conducts its bail bond business; Associated is National‘s instrumentality or agent to appoint agents, and, as such, exercises close supervision over them; the amount charged for a bond is limited by Associated to a maximum of 10 per cent. The use of the terminology of “sale” with reference to the bonds as between National, Associated, and the agents,
“Q. BY MR. FLYNN: Now, am I correct in understanding your statement, Mr. Groves, that the premium, so far as the copy is concerned, is one per cent? A. That is the amount that is put in here, and the amount that is----”
“THE COURT: That is paid to the company?”
“THE WITNESS: No. It is quite something to explain. That is the way it was devised at the time these forms were prepared. There was a question, so your Honor will really get what the full picture is----there was a question as to whether or not if the company would have to pay on the gross amount that the agent received as a tax, which necessitated then each agent filing a complete list of each and every bond written, the total amount he received. If they were outside of the State of California, he had to deduct them, and so forth. It made quite a thing, and so then it was devised that this receipt which would show one per cent here is the amount the insurance company or surety company would presumably pay the state tax on, and the balance was to presumably go to the agent and to us, and then we pay the company.” (Rep. Tr., p. 106.)
Defendants rely upon various provisions of the Insurance Code, asserting that a broker dealing in ordinary insurance is an agent of the insured and not the insurer, and rebates on premiums may not be given or commissions split by them except where he is placing the insurance with sureties which have not appointed them as agents, citing
One of the main contentions of defendants is that the money received by plaintiff-agent other than the 1 per cent paid to National is not premium for the bond; that the ordinance purports to reach only such receipts of the agent because it excludes from the tax on his gross receipts any insurance premiums received by him on behalf of an insurance company, and, therefore, it does not violate the constitutional provision as the latter reserves to the state the right to tax gross premiums of insurance companies; that lacking the characteristics of premiums, plaintiff‘s business in receiving them is independent and not as agent of National.
It is urged that the foregoing question is not involved in this case because it does not concern whether the state may tax those receipts, and that the sole issue is whether plaintiff was National‘s agent and within the holding of Hughes v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 168 Cal. 764, and thus subject to the ordinance. We believe, however, that the question is so intimately connected with the problem presented that it must be determined. While it is true that no insurance company is a party to this proceeding and there are actions pending in the superior court for Los Angeles County by the state against insurance companies to recover gross premium taxes which involve such receipts, the state Insurance Commissioner and several insurance companies, including National, have filed briefs in this case and discuss the question. The judgment rendered by the trial court in this case is broad. It declares that plaintiff is not subject to the tax provided for under the ordinance and enjoins defendants from collecting any such tax from plaintiff. Moreover, it is clear that the nature of plaintiff‘s receipts has some bearing upon whether, in conducting the business by which he receives them, he is doing an insurance business for National.
Defendants point out (heretofore mentioned) that the receipt given by the plaintiff-agent to the one obtaining the
In various aspects the contention is made that administrative construction requires the conclusion that the 9 per cent retained by the agent is not premium. It is pointed out that the state has collected a tax on only the 1 per cent received by National. That is all its books would show, and a neglect to collect the tax because of failure to look beyond those books is hardly a compelling construction that the 1 per cent was the only premium. Moreover, it must be remembered, concerning this question of administrative construction, that where it is erroneous it is not binding on the court. (California Drive-In Restaurant Assn. v. Clark, 22 Cal. 2d 287 [140 P.2d 657, 147 A.L.R. 1028]; Bodinson Mfg. Co. v. California Emp. Com., 17 Cal. 2d 321 [109 P.2d 935].)
It is urged that if the bail bond is cancelled the insurer (National) is liable for a return of only 1 per cent stated as premium on the face of the bond (citing
Point is made of the requirement that every policy must set forth therein the premium (
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
SCHAUER, J.----I dissent. Under the majority opinion herein, as under the opinion in Hughes v. Los Angeles (1914), 168 Cal. 764, 765 [145 P. 94], there are classes of business----those of local insurance agent and of bail bondsman----in which persons may engage without being subject to local license taxation. The express ground of decision of the Hughes case is that “in a direct and immediate sense a tax upon such agents [general and local insurance agents] for the right to do business is a tax upon the corporation‘s right to do business” (p. 765 of 168 Cal.). But the theory of the Hughes case and this case cannot be logically limited to freeing local agents from local license taxes. The provision of the California Constitution (
If the Hughes case is to be given consistent application then a state tax upon an insurance agent‘s income derived from his insurance business is as invalid as a local license tax on the right to carry on such business. In Edward Brown & Sons v. McColgan (1942), 53 Cal. App. 2d 504, 506-508 [128 P.2d 186], the District Court of Appeal was confronted with such a problem. There a corporate insurance agent contended that because of the Hughes decision it need not pay its franchise (state income) tax. This contention was rejected. The appellate court attempted to distinguish the Hughes case on the ground that the Hughes license tax was upon the privilege of transacting insurance business and impinged directly on the insurance company, whereas the franchise tax was upon the corporate agent‘s privilege of being a corporation.
The majority opinion in the present case recognizes the difficulty of drawing such a distinction and says (p. 756, supra), “the soundness of the last cited case may be questionable.” But, the majority opinion goes on to say, “it may be distinguished on the ground that, although the franchise tax is computed on the net income of the corporation, it is on the privilege of using the corporate mechanism to do business and hence has no relation to the nature of the business conducted. Thus the tax is not on the insurance business within the meaning of the Constitution.” The purported distinction made by the majority would have no application to a state income tax on an individual insurance agent.
I would, therefore, conclude that the Hughes decision is unsound and should be overruled. It is my further opinion that, even without overruling that case, the validity of Los Angeles Ordinance No. 77,000, as amended by Ordinance No. 92,414, could be upheld. If this latter conclusion were reached then, as will hereinafter appear, Groves would not be subject to the license tax because of the terms of the ordinance itself, rather than because of a strained application of
The judgment of the trial court does not recognize that it is because of the terms of the ordinance itself that certain taxes cannot be imposed on Groves; rather, it perpetually enjoins defendants from collecting any taxes from Groves under such ordinance. Since Groves may become liable for taxes other than those here discussed, I would reverse the judgment.
Appellants’ petition for a rehearing was denied May 21, 1953. Schauer, J., and Spence, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
